eprisin A Role Kraig Swartz plays Neil Simon's Eugene Jerome again in 'Broadway Bound." SUZANNE CIESSLER SPECIAL TO THE JEWISH NEWS n the brief moment before Kraig Swartz steps on stage, the actor feels the same exhil- aration he experiences the moment a roller coaster ride changes from moving slowly over a hill to creating a sudden, free-falling sensation. "They're both fun and scary," the entertainer said about theater and his favorite leisure • activity. In Michigan to play the role of Eugene Jerome in the April 21-May 15 Meadow Brook The- atre production of Broadway Bound, Mr. Swartz is particu- larly excited about appearing in the Neil Simon comedy. "I play the youngest of two brothers who are trying to get in on the ground floor of the mass media comedy move- ment," Mr. Swartz said. "He's a wise-cracking, thoughtful guy, and he's very funny. "I played Eugene almost 10 years ago in a college produc- tion of Brighton Beach Mem- oirs, another play in the Neil Simon trilogy, which also in- cludes Biloxi Blues. At the time I played him he was 15, and now he's 23. So rm growing up along with Eugene." Mr. Swartz, 29, had that earlier role as a student at the DePaul University Goodman School of Drama, where he received his bachelor of fine arts degree in acting. Since then, he has appeared in regional theaters across the country. He played two roles at the BoarsHead Theatre in Lansing, where he was cast in The Mousetrap and The Lion in Winter. "I've wanted to work at Meadow Brook for years," he said. "I auditioned for Terry Kilburn, and he said he thought I'd be very good in Broadway Bound. "When I heard they were having auditions for the role of Eugene, I called the theater. The secretary told me Mr. Kil- bum was out of town and would not be back until the role was cast. "I was in Minneapolis doing a play at the time. When Mr. Kilburn called me back, he said he was in Minneapolis, and it turned out he was staying about five blocks from me. I read for him and got the part." Mr. Swartz, who grew up in Minnesota, had his first stage experience in a synagogue pro- duction in 1972. "My mom and dad used to be very active in community the- ater," he recalled. "My father was going to be in a 1972 musical revue at the synagogue, and I wanted to go along with him to the audition. "Everybody was going up to sing with the pianist while the director watched. They turned to me and said it was my turn, and my dad got me to sing 'Do Re Mi' from The Sound of He played Eugene 10 years ago. Music. I got into the revue with my dad, and ever since, I've known what I wanted to do." While attending high school, Mr. Swartz started to win pro- fessional roles in regional theater productions featured in his home state. At the time he was deciding which college to attend, one of the touring actors told him about the Goodman School of Drama in Chicago. After graduation from col- lege, he decided to remain in the city, where many Midwest the- ater companies hold auditions. "During the '80s, when I was going to college, Chicago was becoming a real center for theater and film," Mr. Swartz explained. "It was like having the same opportunities you would have in New York or Los Angeles without the frighten- ing glut of actors. "It was easy to get an agent and get noticed by casting di- rectors, and it was easy to be Kraig Swartz at Meadow Brook seen by network personnel." He had an unusual profes- sional debut in Chicago. "I was doing a performance of a Jim Sherman play, The God of Isaac, and it was Jim's first real hit," Mr. Swartz said. "Jim actually played the lead in that play. I understudied the playwright and got to go on for him." Other productions in which he has appeared are Holiday Memories, The Author's Voice, The Little Prince and Bent, which resulted in a Florida The- atre Critics' Association nomi- nation for best supporting performance in 1990. Mr. Swartz said that most of the work he gets now is through people he has worked with or known in the past. "One of my very best friends, Karen Sheridan, is a teacher at Oakland University," he said. "She was getting her graduate degree at the Goodman School of Drama while I was getting my undergraduate degree. 'We did several productions together, and she was actually the one who informed me that Meadow Brook would be a great place to work. So it's really because of her that I'm here." During rehearsals, Mr. Swartz thought about the two things he likes best about Broadway Bound: the feeling of family and the humor. The actor, who is single, will have his parents in Michigan for opening night and will have more time for family with his next role, which will take him back to Minneapolis. "It's a new play called Fat Men in Skirts," Mr. Swartz re- vealed. "It's a dark comedy about a person being responsi- ble for his or her actions. REPRISING A ROLE page 93 83